w I1 PAGE FOUR 1kW M-TiCiGAiA DAIL Y 1aiUA1.y3ixs k, J cL;LJAAI7, 154 I i4ite' lete By HARRY LUNN Daily Managing Editor THE NATION'S newspaper editors general- ly have been encouraged by the intel- ligent attitude of the Administration toward the freedom of information problem, partic- ularly by President Eisenhower's liberaliza- tion of press conference formalities and wil- lingness to tackle press questions freely. In publishing any newspaper editors run into frequent public information problems which generally can be attributed to the penchant of individuals and organizations to crow about their achievements and clam up on embarassing or uncomplimentary incidents. The public information problem with the government had become grave under the last Administration but the current changes in policy seem thus far to be all to the good. Unfortunately the local situation which improved quite noticeably early in the school year with release of important ac- tions by the Faculty Senate has deteriorat- ed to some extent among student organi- zations. The Interfraternity Council several meet- :ngs ago decided to close off the bulk of dis- cussion time in house president's meetings when IFC officials felt "negative" aspects df. the fraternity system were seeping into print, often out of the mouths of their own compatriots. Evidently this could hardly do for a prize-winning organization, so the house presidents' discussion time, which in the past years has featured lively and im- portant debate on controversial issues with- in the system, was closed off lest these "neg- ative" aspects be given further notice. Thus the important discussion on nomi- nating .acting Dean of Students Walter B. Rea for the proposed University Vice-Presi- dency for Student Affairs was, barred from print and other topics have been hidden be- hind closed doors. The decision to operate in a circumvent manner came within a few weeks after The Daily cooperated with IFC leaders in a campaign to improve health standards in the fraternity houses. At that time it was pointed out to the IFC that a revealing 'crusade" might have been undertaken by the paper with picture stories on conditions in various houses, but Daily editors believ- ed that sensible cooperation rather than expose was the best method to help cor- rect the situation. We can think of noth- ig more "positive" than this action and feel the IFC is lapsing into its much fea- ed "negativism" by foolishly choking off debate on current issues of concern not only to the fraternities but to the campus as a whole. The Joint Judiciary Council, never overly eager to have its activities publicized, has re- cently become more timid than ever. Rumors circulate all over campus on fraternity, so- rority and other group discipline cases, but the Council has been loathe to enumerate beyond a statistical report. In cases involving group discpiline, disclosure of fines has oft- en occured in past years. Such disclosure counters untrue rumor and is sometimes as much feared as the fines. Now reconsidering its press policies, Joint Judic would do a service to the community if it adopted a pro- cedure of releasing reports on group disci- pline as it levies its penalties. The Union Board has admitted reporters to its meetings since late last spring, but could pu'rsue a more liberal policy of releas- ing news. Though incidents may prove oc- casionally embarassing, frank disclosure is preferable to pretending nothing happened. Tniversity administration press policy could also employ fuller disclosure, although it is unfair to generalize about all offices and departments since some have more intelli- gent policies than others. However, the Board of Regents still stands as an example of vir- tual lack of public informtion. No coverage is permitted and news must be derived from a stream of often innocuous press releases. If the Regents are not prepared to allow di- rect coverage, a system of post meeting press conferences could be initiated with good ef- fect. On the positive side, the Faculty Senate deliberations, Literary College meetings and Board of Governors of the Residence Hall meetings have resulted in fuller pub- lic information through interviewing in the first two cases and direct coverage in the last. The Inter-House Council has also permitted more direct coverage of its ac - tivities. The Daily continually works to make its coverage of campus events more complete and direct. It realizes that groups will not be eager to have their work publicized in every case, but feels that the campus deserves complete coverage and that in the long run frank and direct information will benefit even the most reticent of organizations. * * * * SINCE PLAYWRIGHT Arthur Miller left the University as a graduate in the late thirties he has earned a significant place in the ranks of scholars who have studied here and justifiably can be considered the out- standing literary figure to emerge from this campus. Most recently Miller produced a pro- vocative analysis or the school which pos- sibly contains more truth than the Univer- sity would like to admit. Considering Miller's literary achievements and great promise, we feel he deserves the honor of delivering the next commencement address and receiving an honorary doctoral award might seem unprecedented after Mil- se.nree d e MA''ER OF F ACT By JOSEPH ALSOP Indonesia .. . JAKARTA, Indonesia-The temptation in this country is to throw up one's hands." Disorder, disorganization and disunion reign just now. The present government is feeble and feckless. Communist penetration is currently active and obvious. Altogether, Indonesia is passing through a dark time. The point that must be remembered, how- ever, is that new nations commonly pass through dark times before they find them- selved. Our own American experiment staggered on the raw edge of disaster, after all, for some years after our revo- lution. And in our case, there was no powerful conspiracy always seeking to take advantage of our difficulties and our inexperience. One can see here, moreover, the same sort of reserve assets that carried the Am- erican experiment to success in the end. There is, first of all, a group of national leaders of exceptional quality. Americans may not always agree with the views that President Soekarno publicly ex- presses (which are not always his private views). But no one who meets this slender, intense man, whose pleasant manner veils deep shrewdness, bold imagination and iron courage, can doubt his patriotism or fail to be impressed by his personal stature. Tb. other heroes of the Indonesian revolution, the wise and practical Vice-President Hatta, Dr. Sjahrir and the Sultan of Jogiakarta, are also leaders worthy of a new nation. There are other such. Today these lead- ers of the new Indonesia are unhappily divided by the differences that arise when a heroic revolutionary period ends. and the more prosaic tasks of nation-building must be undertaken. Yet one cannot help but feel that the leaders of the new In- donesia will soon draw together again in the face of imminent national danger. The mere existence of these leaders, in- deed, betokens still another Indonesian as- set-the promise of the Indonesian people, One of the prime characteristics of the Dutch colonial system was to do everything to prevent the emergence of a trained and determined popular leadership. A weak peo- ple would not have overcome that obstacle. This is not a weak people. This is one of the most impressive peoples of Asia. If In- donesia's grim public health problem can only be solved, this is also likely to prove one of the most vigorous peoples of Asia. The real progress of these last eight years has been in the domain of strengthening the Indonesian people-by greatly reducing the once almost universal illiteracy, by mak- ing a strong first attack on the crucial pub- lic health problem, and so on. But besides this great asset of its 80,000,000 people, In- donesia has the further asset of great but unrealized national wealth. Java is overcrowded, but there is rich empty land in Sumatra, in Borneo and the other islands. There is much raw material wealth as well. Altogether this is a country with a future. One can see why the recent conference of British Far Eastern ambassadors at Singapore con- cluded that if Indonesia were given half a chance, Indonesia would be the leading power in Southern Asia in ten years' time. It is just this bright hope for the future that makes a visit to Indonesia a stimulating experience. The question remains, of course, whether the hope will be realized. ON THIS HEAD, also, there are reasons to be encouraged that do not show on the surface of the present unhappy situation. The existing Indonesian governmental struc- ture, to begin with, is no better than our Continental Congress. It is rickety provi- sional and unrepresentative. There has been no constituent assembly, no national elec- tion. A final governmental form is still to be worked out. Meanwhile the unreal and rather nasty parliamentary game that is played here in Jakarta is what has given the Com- munists their opportunity thus far. Out- side Jakarta, they have got next to no- where. It is conceivable that the Com- munists and those deluded Indonesian politicians who think they can use the Communists-and are of course actually being used by them-may win here in Jakarta. But it is very hard to see them winning in Indonesia as a whole. The potential forces of resistance are in fact very great. The political and military leaders who want real national independence and are determined to prevent the substi- tution of Communist imperialism for Dutch imperialism; the devoutly Muslim masses of the people who Will follow these leaders; the huge size and loose organization of the country, which is too big to be won by clever little dirty games in Jakarta-these are the strong protections of Indonesia's true inde- pendence. "The Communists," one of the wisest and most progressive Indonesians told me, "may be able to make a chaos in this, country, but as of today they cannot con- trol the chaos." There is only one thing that may change this forecast. The endless complaints of "American imperialism" that you hear in Indonesia are not only indications of the clumsiness of American policy. They are here, the urge to appease that will be felt here, the bandwagon jumping that will go on here, will finally upset the Indonesian balance. In that event, Indonesia will quite probably end as another province in the world Communist empire. IAT*d * * * 13urma .. . RANGOON, Burma-Here in Burma, more than anywhere else in the Far East, you feel the tragedy of the present trend of events in Asia. Everything and every one in this small, hopeful country with its young, hopeful government seems to say with one voice, "We'll be OK in the end if we're just left alone." But what are Burma's chances of being left alone to develop into the stur- dy, prosperous, independent country that Burma ought to be? Not too good, appears to be the answer. On the one hand, there is the problem of the Chinese Nationalist refugee troops of Gen. Li Mi. Most people suppose that these troops are at least a genuinely anti- Communist force. They have been spon- sored before the world by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek. From their lairs in the North Burma mountains, they have car- ried on small operations against the Chi- nese Communists across the border. Where could you get better proofs of anti-Communism? Unhappily, however, this Chinese force in Burma that wears the label of Chiang Kai- shek is in fact one of the biggest current assets of the world Communist conspiracy. After the recent evacuation program, at least 8,000 of these Chinese troops remain- ed in Burma, as a sort of state within a state. No government on earth could safe- ly tolerate this kind of gross violation of its sovereignty. If the Chinese in Burma will not go to Formosa, the Burmese government must and will use force against them. This is all the more necessary, since the Chinese have now formed an alliance with the Kar- en rebels, who are in turn allied with the Burmese Communist insurgents. On the other hand, the Burmese gov- ernment was just about to liquidate the Communist and Karen rebellions when it had to divert over half its armed forces to deal with the Chinese guerrillas. The able minister of war, U Ba Swe, is con- fident he can bring order to Burma in the end. But if he has to fight the Chi- nese as well as the Karens and the Com- munists, restoring order may well take a long time. In short, the presence of these Chinese troops in Burma has given Bur- ma's Communist insurgents an invaluable new lease on life. This is not all. As the extremely realistic Burmese leaders frankly recognize, because internal disorder is the strongest tempta- tion to external aggression. And even now Communist China is obviously preparing to exploit Burma's troubles. The signs on the border are already dis- quieting. The Old Burma Road has been fully hard-surfaced and made into a seri- ous military highway. Other miiltary roads have been built along the border. In addi- tion, Peking long ago established an "Auto- nomous Thai Federation," to make trouble in Thailand, in Laos, in Indo-China and among the Thais in Burma's Shan states And more recently, Peking has set up an "Autonomous Kachin area" to gain leverage among the Kachins, who are the other ma- jor tribal group in the Burmese border re- gion. The Kachin project -is particularly well- organized. The leader is Naw Sein, ex- bandit, ex-anti-Japanese resistance chief and sort of Kachin Robin Hood, whom the Chinese Communists have taken into camp. There is an indoctrination school for Bur- mese Kachins at Pao Shan, the main ad- ministrative center on the Chinese side of the border. Agents are already being sent across the border to work among the Ka- chins in Burma. No clearer proof of China's intentions toward Burma could possibly be asked for. ** * THE DANGER is not now, to be sure. The danger lies in the future, when Com- munist China's huge military buildup has been completed. And an overt Chinese mili- tary attack on Burma is by no means the only danger or even the greatest danger. Imagine the following situation. Burma is still in disorder. The Chinese Communists begin to give active financial and other support to the Burmese Communists and other dissident groups. They pull the levers they have been preparing, to raise further revolts among the Kachins and the peoples of the Shan states. They also move thirty divisions or so to Pao Shan and send a few squadrons of jets down to the border air- fields, thus filling Burma with the fears and the dissensions that are always caused by the threat of superior force. At the same time Peking angrily demands a "friendly" Burmese government-namely a govern- ment with Communists in key posts. I ventured to ask the Burmese leaders whether they thought they could defeat this kind of simple imitation of the tactics by which Hitler took half of Europe with- out firing a shot. None were surprised by the question. The wisest of them spoke for tle others when he said, "If our coun- try is stable and united, we have nothing "A Spot Like This Might Be Just The Place For It" tr. '1~ I -M t - ON THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND WITH DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-At a recent White House dinner for the diplo- matic corps, ambassadors were curious over an animated con- versation between President Eisenhower and Bolivian Ambassador Victor Andrade. The President huddled with Andrade longer than with any other diplomat. Ambassador Andrade represents a country with plenty of problems, though many of them have been ironed out, thanks to his own astute diplomacy. However, Bolivia is still wooed by Dictator Peron and troubled by some Communist agitators; so there was a lot of speculation among envoys as to what the two men talked about-especially when Andrade remained myster- iously mum. However, the subject of their conversation was-golf. The Bolivian Ambassador, who plays in about the same 80-to9O scoring range as the President, but plays at the Chevy Chase club, not Burning Tree, was asked whether he had ever played with Gen. Frank Allen, former commander of the 3rd Armored Division and. European public-relations chief for Ike during the war-a member of Chevy Chase. Then the President quizzed Andrade about golf in the upper altitudes of La Paz, capital of Bolivia. One golf course in La Paz is about 14,000 feet above sea level. And in that rarefied atmosphere, the Ambassador explained, the ball goes much farther. He said he had sometimes driven 400 yards on a shot which would have been around 250 yards in the P.S.A. And that was what had other diplomats buzzing at the White House dinner. * * * * TROOPS OUT OF KOREA THE ORDER TO withdraw 21,000 U.S. troops from Korea caused some backstage bitterness in the Pentagon, but is one of the most important policy steps the United States has ever taken in regard to future war. It completely reverses the old State Department-Pentagon policy against using the atom bomb . It also marks the beginning of American reliance on atom bombs instead of land armies. Hitherto, Secretary of State Acheson was dead 6pposed to using the A-bomb in Korea or in neighboring China. So was Gen. Omar Bradley and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. So also were our Western allies. And when President Truman once let drop in a press confer- ence the idea that he was even considering the use of the A-bomb in Korea, Clement Attlee, Prime Minister of England, came rushing across the Atlantic to stop him. Today, however, it is Secretary of State Dulles and the civilian chiefs of the Defense Department who have reversed this policy. U.S. military leaders are decidedly doubtful. Adm. Arthur Radford, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has held a private debate with Secretary Dulles, arguing that if it becomes necessary to stop aggression we should try to confine .ourselves to little, limited wars. We should not let war spread. This is a reversal of position for Admiral Radford. Now in the No. 1 military spot of the nation, Admiral Radford of late has been arguing for "conventional weapons" and for outlawing the atom bomb. SKEPTICAL RIDGWAY GEN. MATT RIDGWAY, Army Chief of Staff, and brilliant ex- commander in Korea, has been equally skeptical of the new pol- icy. Privately he branded the withdrawal of two divisions from Ko- rea as "politics." (The troops won't come home until next September or October.) And he is highly doubtful about substituting atomic warfare for ground troops. What the military men privately'ask is: "what are we going to to with baby atomic bombs if the enemy comes back with much larger atomic bombs? We now know that Moscow even has the hydrogen bomb. Once we start using baby atom bombs, how are we going to keep the enemy from using hydrogen bombs?" This has always been pretty much the position of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. It was only General MacArthur and the China bloc who wanted to use atomic weapons in the Far Eastern theater. However, Secretary of State Dulles, with Undersecretary of De- fense Kyes, and to a lesser extent, Secretary of Defense Wilson, be- lieve we should now concentrate on atomic strength and fast-striking forces. Their idea is to hit the source of aggression-which in the case of Korea would be China. Thus, though not announced in so many words, the Korean troop withdrawal is the most radical change of American military and for- eign strategy since Eisenhower took office one year ago. Note 1-General Itidgway was understandably so upset over the cuts Secretary of Defense Wilson ordered in the U.S. Army that he tried not to appear before the National Security Council where he would have to defend those cuts. When Ridgway tried to arrange a conflicting engagement, Wilson finally had to order him to be present and dutifully help chop down the Army budget. Note 2-Secretary of the Army Stevens was less dutiful. He call- ed on the President in person, urged that the Army not be cut so drastically. Eisenhower made no decision, told Stevens the matter would be decided by the National Security Council. * * * * WASHINGTON PIPELINE W HILE ALMOST every other member of the Eisenhower cabinet has clamped the strictest censorship on news, John Foster Dulles has gone out of his way to release State Department information. He mainta inst.t a hle ant nestandA men foein nolie DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I (Continued from Page 2) Theta Delta Chi January 9, 1954_ Adephi Sorority Alpha Delta Phi Alpha Kappa Kappa Alpha Kappa Psi Beta Theta Pi Chi Phi Delta Tau Delta Delta Theta Phi . I.F.C. District No. 5 (Sigma Nu) Kappa Sigma Lambda Chi Alpha Phi Delta Epsilon Phi Kappa Sigma' Sigma Chi Academic Notices Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thursday. Jan. 7, at 4 p.m., in 247 West Engineering. Speaker: Dr. R. K. Ritt will continue on Theory of Dis- tributions. The seventh review session for stu- dents of French I will take place on Thurs., Jan. 7. beginning at 7:30 in the Romance Languages Building. Course 401, the Interdisciplinary Sem- inar in the Application of Mathematics to the Social Sciences, will meet on Thurs., Jan. 7, at 4 p.m., in 3409 Mason Hall. Professor A. H. Copeland of the Mathematics Department will speak on "People as Complementary Ideals in a Boolean Algebra." Seminar of the Department of Bio- logical Chemistry. Dr. A. G. Norman Professor of Botany and Research Bio- chemist, Michigan Memorial-Phoenix Project No. 32, will be the guest speaker at the seminar of the Department of Biological Chemistry, to be held in 319 W. Medical Building at 4 p.m., Fri., Jan. 8. His topic will be "Some Applications of Biological Chemistry to Agricultural Research." Doctoral Examination for George Stern Quick, Economics; thesis: "Industry In- tegration Committees of the Army Ord- nance Department: A study of govern- ment-encouraged cooperation among certain armament manufacturers in World War II," Thurs., Jan. 7. 105 Eco- nomics Bldg. at 9 a.m Chairman, Wil- liam Haber. Doctoral Examination for Alexander Weir, Jr., Chemical,.Engineering; thesis: "Two- and Three-Dimensional Flow of Air, through Square-Edged Sonic Ori- fices," Thurs., Jan. 7, 3201 East Engi- neering Building, at 2 pm. Chairman J. L. York. Doctoral Examination for Arthur Ner- sasian, Chemistry; thesis: "A Study of Some Azo Nitriles," Thurs., Jan. 7, 3003 Chemistry Building, at 3 p.m. Chair- man, L. C. Anderson. Doctoral Examination for John Joseph Gumperz, Germanic Languages and Lit- eratures: thesis: "The Swabian Dialect of Washtenaw County, Michigan," Fri., Jan. 8, 102-D Tappan Hall, at 1 p.m. Chairman, Herbert Penzl. Doctoral Examination for Robert Les- lie Hunter, Zoology; thesis: "Quanti- tative Measurements of Alesterase in the Early Development of Frog and Mouse," Fri., Jan. 8 2089 Natural Science Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, N. E. Kemp. Doctoral Examination for Joseph An- thony Consiglio, Chemical Engineering; thesis: "The Effect of Operating Var- iables on Sprays Produced by a Pres- sure-Type Nozzle," Fri., Jan. 8, 3201 ,East Engineering Bldg., at 2 p.m. Chairman, C. M. Siiepcevich. Doctoral Examination for Kooman IBoycheff, Education; thesis: "Intercol- legiate Athletics and Physical Educa- tion at the University of Chicago, 1892- 1952," Fri., Jan. 8 4024 University High School, at 3 p.m. Chairman, C. Eggert- sen. Doctoral Examination for John Drew O'Neill English Language and Litera- ture; thesis: "The Comedy of St. John Hankin," Fri., Jan. 8, 1954, 626 Haven Hall at 3 p.m. Chairman Paul Mueschke. Concerts Student Recital. Julia Hennig, pian- ist, will play compositions by Bach, Milhaud, and Chopin, at 8:30 Thurs- day evening, Jan. 7, in the Rackhamr Assembly Hall. The recital is to be pre- sented in partial fulfillment of thepre- quirements for the Master of Music degree, and will be open to the general public. Miss Hennig is a pupil of Mar- ian Owen. University Symphony Band, William SD. 41evelli, Conductor, and the Michi- gan Singers, Maynard Klein, Conductor, will be heard in a public concert at 8:30 Friday evening, Jan. 8, in Hill Audi- torium. The program is presented in connection with the 9th Annual Mid- western Conference on School Vocal and Instrumental Music, and will be open to the public without charge. The University Symphony Band will open the concert with compositions by Grofe, Mendelssohn, Rimsky-Korsakov, Wil- liams, and Respighi. Part II will be per- formed by the Michigan Singers in works by dePres, Ginastera, Bruckner, and Montiverdi, whose Sonata Sopra, "Sancta Maria, ora pro nobis" was adap- ted for symphonic band and chorus by Hans T. David, and dedicated to Pro- fessor Revelli and the University Sym- phony Band. The Band will close the program with Symphony for Brass and 'Percussion by Reed, Grape-Festival from "Italian Sketches" and Michigan Rhap- sody, arranged by Werle. Events Today Industrial Relations Club. Last meet- ing of the semester will be held to- night at 7:15 in the student lounge of the Bus. Ad. School. The program will be a "Mock" arbitration case with Club members presenting the companies side and the unions side. This is an actual case that Meyer Ryder arbitrated for a company and union. Coffee will be served. ArtsaChorale. The regular weekly re- hearsal will be held this evening from 7 to 8 p.m. in Auditorium D, Angell Butler Yeats' poetic dance-drama, DEIRDRE. There is no admission charge, and the seats are not reserved. The Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre wIl open at 7:30 tonight. Play Production, Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office, is still accepting mail orders this week for the Department of Speech production of Moliere's comedy, TAR- TUFFE; OR, THE IMPOSTOR, which will be presented in the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre, at 8 p.m. wednesday through Saturday, Jan. 13, 14, 15, and 16. Tickets are $1.20-90c-60c with a spec- ial student rate of any seat in the house in effect for the Wednesday and Thursday performances. Please enclose a self-stamped addressed envelope. The Kaffee Stunde of the Deutscher verein will meet today at 3:15 in the Union. Dr. Gaiss of the German De- partment will be there. All welcome to practice their oral German before exams. Junior Girls Play Tryouts. Singing and speaking tryouts-Thurs., Jan. 7- from 2 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m.;Fr, Jan. 8-from 2 to 5 p.m. Dancing tryouts-Thurs., Jan. 7 from 2 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m.; Fri. Jan. 8, 'from 2 to 5 p.m. Room numbers will be posted at the League, where all tryouts will be held. Graduate Record Concert. There will be a graduate record concert at 8 o'clock this evening in the west Lounge of Rackham Building. The program is posted on the first floor of the build- ing. All graduate students welcome. Hillel:' 4 p.m.-Class in Jewish Hor day Observances. 7:30 p.m.-Class in Ad- vanced Hebrew. 8 p.m.-Music-For-Al, classical music recorded on Hi-Fl sound system. Reservations for Kosher Dinner Fri- day, at 6 p.m., must be made by today. Christian Science Organization. Tes- timony meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m., Fireside Room, Lane Hall. All are wel- come. The Congregational-Disciples Guild. Mid-week Meditation in Douglas Chapel, this afternoon 5 to 5:30 p.m. Fresh- man Discussion Group at Guild House 7 to 8 p.m. DOB -- GAL III ....,.... ....MM3 Phi Sigma Society. Dr. Harlyn O. Halvorson, of the Department of Bac- teriology, will speak on "Recent Ad. vances in the Study of Enzymatic Adap- tation," tonight, 8 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheater. Refreshments after the meeting for members and guests. Open to the public. Seminar on "How Shall We Define Religion?" Presentation and discus- sion led by Prof. Thomas S. Kepler, author, editor, and theologian from the Oberlin Graduate School of Theology, Lane Hall Library, this evening, 8 p.m, La p'tite causette will meet this aft- ernoon from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. In the wing of the north room of the Michigan Union Cafeteria. Everyone welcome Alpha Phi Omega. Important pledge 'meeting tonight, 7:30-8:30 p.m., in G-143 South Quad. All pledges must at- tend. The rest of the pledge fee must" be paid at this time. The test on know- ing the campus will be given. International Center Weekly Tea will' be held this afternoon from 4:30 to * Iat the International Center. Kappa Phi. There will be a meeting this afternoon at 5:15 at the Methodist Church. Please bring money for our 'Ensian picture. Coming Events The Congregational-Disciples Guild. TeGraduate-Prof essional Group will t. meet at the Guild House Fri., Jan. 8, at 8 p.m. Roger Williams Guild. Games Party at the Guild House, Friday evening at 8 o'clock. Bridge, chess, checkers, ea- nasta, and others. Episcopal Student Foundation. Can- terbury Club, 7:30 p.m. Fri., Jan. 8 at Canterbury House. Professor Palmer Throop will speak on "The Rise and Decline of the Crusading Ideal." Episcopal Student Foundation. Tea from 4 to 5:30 at Canterbury House, Fri., Jan. 8. All students invited. ? i l1, Sixty-Fourth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications: r. 4 #, ;. xI Editorial Staff Harry Lunn............Managing Editor Eric Vetter .................City Editor Virginia Voss......... Editorial Director Mike Wolff ........Associate City Editor Alice B. Silver..Assoc. Editorial Director Diane Decker . .....Associate Editor Helene Simon ......... .. Associate Editor Ivan Kaye................,Sports Editor Paul Greenberg.... Assoc. Sports Editor Marilyn Campbell...Women's Editor Kathy Zeisler....Assoc. Women's Editor Don Campbell.......ead Photographer Business Staff Thomas Treeger...Business Manager William Kaufman Advertising Manager Harlean Hankin .... Assoc. Business Mgr. William Seiden.......Finance Manager James Sharp...C.Circulation Manager The Michigan Crib-Pre-Legal Society Telephone NO 23-24-1 -and the STUDENT BAR ASsOCIA- I